Putin removes Russia from agreement on International Criminal Court

Russia will withdraw from the Rome Statute establishing the International Criminal Court (ICC), according to an order signed by Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Putin has agreed to accept this proposal by the Ministry of Justice of Russia, which is coordinated with other departments and the Supreme Court, and instructed to notify the UN Secretary General about Russia’s intention to withdraw from the agreement.

It is worth noting that Putin’s decree was published the next day after the ICC had issued a preliminary investigation by a prosecutor, which designated the occupation of Crimea as an international armed conflict between Ukraine and Russia. “The information available suggests that the situation within the territory of Crimea and Sevastopol amounts to an international armed conflict between Ukraine and the Russian Federation,” the report says.

“This international armed conflict began at the latest on February 26 when the Russian Federation deployed members of its armed forces to gain control over parts of the Ukrainian territory without the consent of the Ukrainian Government,” ICC Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda said.

The ratification of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court provides that crimes committed by citizens from the countries that have ratified it or in their territory are subject to jurisdiction of the international court in The Hague.

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"News from Crimea" (en.sobytiya.info) is the English version of the Russian-speaking “События Крыма” portal (sobytiya.info). This is a project of independent journalists, which pooled their efforts to create the high-quality news and opened first in Crimea independent news media without political patronage of the founders in 2012.
One can be confident of the objective information provided, as the news is made by a group of independent journalists, which is quite rare in Crimea and Russia.

After the annexation of Crimea the journalists were persecuted by the Russian and Crimean authorities for their own independent opinion and were forced to move to the mainland Ukraine.

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ABOUT CRIMEAFor centuries the peninsula of Crimea has been the disputed territory and a “tasty morsel” for many states. During the last 100 years Crimea has changed its administrative structure, state affiliation or been occupied more than 10 times. In the former Soviet Union Crimea was a part of the Ukrainian Soviet Republic. Since 1991 it has been the Autonomous Republic within independent Ukraine. In February 2014 Russian invaded Crimea with its troops and annexed the peninsula in March 2014. Since then Crimea has become a "gray area" on the global map: de jure it is part of Ukraine, de facto it is governed by Russia. Ukraine calls it occupation and hopes to return the territory, however, according to the international terms the process that has taken place, is called annexation.

After the Russian annexation the “News from the Crimea” web site is about what has been happening in Crimea.